
In so many years of making a living covering troubled zones there were at least two occasions I was convinced things would never return to normal. On both, I8217;ve been proven so wrong.
The first was early one morning in the bloody fortnight of February in 1983 Assam. More than 3,000 bodies lay around a village called Nellie. Freshly slaughtered, bleeding, many walking wounded with blank faces, dry, blank eyes, some even holding the entrails spilling out of stab wounds. How could Assam ever come back to normal?
Drive through Punjab now and see how. That dark phase is not even a blip on anybody8217;s mind. The highways are better than before, with water parks and more, the traffic faster, the paddies are lush and the mood robust and virile. At the installation ceremony of Amritsar8217;s Rotary Club, the city8217;s most successful and prosperous Sikhs and Hindus give each other plaques and trophies in a manner so Rotarian and talk of donating money to 8220;beautify8221; the cremation grounds both communities obviously share. Just a decade ago, even in the district courts of the supposedly more cosmopolitan Chandigarh, you found Hindu and Sikh lawyers sitting at different tables, looking at each other with sullen suspicion. The divide had seemed so total. So irreversible.
The late Mehra saab, or 8220;Tiny8221; Mehra as he was nicknamed with typically misplaced Amritsari understatement since he packed at least 130 kilos in his six-foot-plus frame, owned The Ritz. The hotel was the favourite of the media8217;s soldiers of fortune, and often after counting the day8217;s dead we sat with him for Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;gup-shup and Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;chai sessions. One evening, he startled me, the only guest in his hotel during the week of Operation Bluestar, by announcing that he was borrowing money from Grindlays and adding another wing to his hotel.
8220;But you must be out of your mind, uncle,8221; I said. 8220;Which tourist will ever come back to Amritsar now?8221;
8220;You will never understand,8221; he said, 8220;People are very tough. They will learn to live with terrorism as you learn to live with diabetes. A little medication, exercise, a few restrictions and you could go on for ever.8221;
Then, it sounded like madness. Today, even though he is not around to enjoy his own vindication, even that so-called 8220;diabetes8221; has vanished without a trace. It feels, instead, like a terminal disease after cure and remission. Both wings of The Ritz, now part of a Mumbai hotel chain, are booming. So are many other hotels, including brand new ones with specialty restaurants, where you have to book a table in advance. The Domino8217;s and Burger King8217; outlets are packed, brushing aside the swadeshi challenge of some old Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;chana-bhatura wallas that now hawk 8220;newdels and bargars8221; or 8220;South Indian and Chinese snakes8221;.
The sunrise businesses are computer training centres, slimming clinics and beauty parlours. At Rayya, just short of Amritsar on the Grand Trunk Road, the police station does not even have a sentry at its open gates. In the past it was a fortress with machine gun nests and bunkers. Even the old humour is back. Look for the tractors with Mercedes 560 SEL or BMW plates, besides, indeed, any number sporting the Maruti 800 logo. The fields have even fewer Sikh workers than before 8212; they now make more money in jobs, trucking or other businesses with many more migrants from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, the Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;bhaiyyas, doing the job at the best agricultural wages anywhere in the third world. Again, in so many years of covering insurgencies, I have seen only two that disappeared so suddenly. With such finality. The other one was led by Sri Lanka8217;s ultra-Sinhala Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna that died with its leadership, put away in cold blood by Jayawardene8217;s vigilantes. Can there be a common reason why these twoinsurgencies have ended with such finality?
In the Amritsar of Bhindranwale, the killer squads, Punjab Police8217;s 8220;cats8221;, Bluestar and worse, there was one man with a big heart, a voice of sanity and with doors always open to harried, hungry and thirsty hacks. Dilbir Singh ran a flourishing woollens business, managed the affairs of scores of Khalsa schools and colleges and found time for his favourite Rotary Club. Since he lived just across the street from The Ritz, you could reach his house even during Bluestar8217;s shoot-at-sight curfew. He was an optimist too, but in a manner less blase than Tiny Mehra8217;s. 8220;This is bound to end one day,8221; he would say. 8220;The Sikhs themselves will realise an eight-district Khalistan will be too small for them to even park all their trucks. We want all of India, Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi.8221; Dilbir Singh and his family took their chances. He never accepted police protection, never flinched from speaking his mind though in a voice so sober you sometimes wondered if he belonged to that city in those shrill times. But he had abelief. People, like the Punjabis, and the Sikhs in particular, who have a stake in their future, do not put up with nonsense for ever.
That is possibly the common reason why the JVP and the Punjab insurgencies ended with such finality. Peoples, ethnic and linguistic groups that have tasted prosperity and thereby a stake in their future, have a strong immune system of sorts that fights back from within. The Sinhalas and the Sikhs are the two richest communities anywhere in the subcontinent and have the highest social indicators. Contrarily, some trouble in Assam still festers. There are still too many people far too poor to have a stake in stability. But this is also exactly why all of Mumbai turned up for work the morning after the serial blasts. Upward mobility brings its own unstoppable momentum. Punjab8217;s return to normalcy is pretty good evidence of that.
But there is also a serious difference. Mumbai runs on business and enterprise. Punjab survives on agriculture which is no longer quite the same driving force as modern enterprise. Punjab8217;s is the story of a state that rode the crest of the green revolution but missed the industrial revolution altogether. The greatest tragedy of the post-insurgency years is that nobody has addressed that issue and the result is stagnation, joblessness, and bankruptcy of a government that still runs in the old, agricultural paradigm, giving out doles, even mortgaging its state roadways, bus stations and buildings to pay its employees8217; salaries.
In the past eight years, Punjab8217;s GDP growth rate has been lower than the all-India average. According to data compiled by the Centre for Monitoring of Indian Economy CMIE, Punjab grew between 1991 and 1996 at 4.6 per cent against the national average of 5.6. Today the gap is even larger. In terms of infrastructure growth, Punjab8217;s story has been disastrous. It8217;s been growing at 2.1 per cent, against the national average of 2.6 and, believe it or not, Bihar8217;s 4.8. It may sound outrageous to compare Punjab unfavourably with Bihar on any developmental parameter but you can8217;t fight with the facts.
If there is one thing that hasn8217;t revived in post-insurgency Punjab it is industry and enterprise. The shells of dead, defunct factories and foundries along the highway are like the wrecks of Basu8217;s Bengal but growing inside them are the seeds of the revival of trouble. Agriculture does not produce enough to satiate the Punjabi, nor does it keep him occupied around the year. The government has no jobs and industry is decaying. We may not see the return of old terrorism, but how long will it be before the old anger and frustration return, maybe as some kind of a viral variant of the old disease?
Postscript: Some things have changed for the worse. The Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;dhabas, for example. My old favourite, the Zimindara Dhaba, 10 km short of Ludhiana, has lost all character to gentrification. Instead of what used to be a limited menu of the world8217;s finest black Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;daal, saag and fresh Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;rotis, it now sells Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;shahi paneer and Atilde;sup2;f40Atilde;sup3;malai kofta, much like the slobbery rubbish you eat at Delhi8217;s wedding hall buffets. Gone are most of the charpoys, fresh butter and the very subtle aroma of freshly churned buttermilk. Mercifully, it serves no Chinese and South Indian snakes, newdels or bargars. At least not yet.